Benny B84 🃏

6.2K posts

Benny B84 🃏

Benny B84 🃏

@B84Benny

Katılım Mart 2021
1.3K Takip Edilen1.1K Takipçiler
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Benny B84 🃏
Benny B84 🃏@B84Benny·
Things I have observed with strong $EGLD NFT projects; 1. Strong, loyal communities > initial hype 2. Creator is transparent and very active in the community 3. Generally lower mint prices, community determined their value 4. Creates additional value to holders
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Benny B84 🃏
Benny B84 🃏@B84Benny·
@DrRitaDed Nobody works harder, less tax, less resources for hospitals, roads etc. There are countries like these but they certainly dont look as nice.
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Benny B84 🃏
Benny B84 🃏@B84Benny·
Not being able to go to the bunker for a forward pass is a joke that the @NRL needs to fix.
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Redbelly Network
Redbelly Network@RedbellyNetwork·
Australia just passed the Corporations Amendment (Digital Assets Framework) Bill 2025, and Redbelly will qualify as Public Digital Token Infrastructure 🇦🇺 That means: ➡️ Redbelly can settle financial assets without a government licence ➡️ DeFi protocols built on top inherit the same freedom ➡️ Until now, only the ASX could do this A full breakdown thread and blog articles dropping soon. Follow us for updates, you don't want to miss what comes next 🔥
Redbelly Network tweet media
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Benny B84 🃏
Benny B84 🃏@B84Benny·
@SpachusAus Both of these markets are the most desirable for cashed up retirees. If that continues, I think these will be major retiree playgrounds like Noosa who arent as affected by rising interest rates and inflation as the general population.
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Spachus Aus
Spachus Aus@SpachusAus·
Sunny Coast and Gold Coast will be the first to be impacted with interest rate rises, inflation and the global economy.
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Spachus Aus
Spachus Aus@SpachusAus·
Australia median house prices (current) 💰 1️⃣ Sunshine Coast — $1,650,000 🌴 2️⃣ Sydney — $1,600,000 🌆 3️⃣ Gold Coast — $1,550,000 🏖️ 4️⃣ Wollongong — $1,300,000 5️⃣ Central Coast NSW — $1,250,000 6️⃣ Newcastle — $1,200,000 7️⃣ Canberra — $1,199,000 8️⃣ Northern Rivers — $1,125,000 9️⃣ Coffs Harbour — $1,130,000 🔟 Brisbane — $1,100,000 1️⃣1️⃣ Melbourne — $1,000,000 1️⃣2️⃣ Cairns — $980,000 1️⃣3️⃣ Geelong — $959,000 1️⃣4️⃣ Hervey Bay — $895,000 1️⃣5️⃣ Hobart — $885,000 1️⃣6️⃣ Adelaide — $880,000 1️⃣7️⃣ Perth — $879,000 1️⃣8️⃣ Toowoomba — $849,000 1️⃣9️⃣ Darwin — $800,000 2️⃣0️⃣ Bundaberg — $799,000 2️⃣1️⃣ Bendigo — $770,000 2️⃣2️⃣ Launceston — $765,000 2️⃣3️⃣ Townsville — $750,000 2️⃣4️⃣ Ballarat — $745,000 2️⃣5️⃣ Albury — $720,552 2️⃣6️⃣ Rockhampton — $700,000 2️⃣7️⃣ Mackay — $685,000
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BitBull
BitBull@AkaBull_·
@Leon_Defi It feels like $TAO's value is more driven by speculation and the supply narrative rather than actual demand metrics.
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Leon
Leon@Leon_Defi·
I think $TAO is being valued based on narrative & supply rather than actual demand. Supply is very attractive: > Hard cap 21M $TAO, halving mechanism (7200 → 3600 $TAO/day). > ~70% of supply is being staked, the number of subnets increases rapidly. But demand is blurry and difficult to measure: > There is no comprehensive dashboard of revenue of the whole network. > Activity (AI inference, training...) takes place off chain. → Real demand cannot be measured. Revenue vs valuation is very different: > Total revenue: about $3M - $15M/year, while FDV ~$5.8B, equivalent to ~400x revenue. > Compared to the market: AI infra ~15–25x, SaaS rarely exceeds 50x. → $TAO is being valued 4-10 times higher than the general standard. Current revenue is actually a subsidy from emission: > For example subnet Chutes: receive ~$52M/year from emission, but only create ~$1-2M real revenue → that is $1 user pays → the system is subsidising an additional $22-40. > If subsidy is removed, the service price will be more expensive than centralized competitors → competitive advantage disappears. Interesting comparison: > @bittensor: revenue ~$3-15M, FDV ~$5.8B → P/S ~400x > @OpenAI: revenue ~$20-25B, valuation ~$700-800B → P/S ~30-40x > @AnthropicAI: revenue ~$14B, valuation ~$380B → P/S ~25-30x Both OpenAI and Anthropic are still losing and burning cash strongly, but at least they have a real revenue of tens of billions of USD while Bittensor has almost not proven real demand.
Leon tweet media
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Bill Wundt
Bill Wundt@BillWundt·
@TMFScottP Peaked at 7.3% lag effect. Your assertion is Global influence only applies when LNP are in Government. Silly little man.
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Scott Phillips
Scott Phillips@TMFScottP·
No, the Treasurer cannot use the Iran war to get off the hook. He's absolutely *not* responsible for the increase in prices from here. But the government is *absolutely* responsible for doing bugger all to help the RBA in the fight against inflation to this point.
Scott Phillips tweet media
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Benny B84 🃏
Benny B84 🃏@B84Benny·
@AvidCommentator It really depends on when they bought. If you are paying a 100k mortgage, the impact is less. If you bought recently, god help you
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Tarric Brooker aka Avid Commentator 🇦🇺
I really dislike the narrative of the "poor mortgage holders" being impacted by higher rates. The average mortgage holder saw rates plummet during Covid and over the last 30 years, giving them an absolutely enormous free kick. Yes there is a risk of another side to that.
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Benny B84 🃏
Benny B84 🃏@B84Benny·
@TMFScottP My inspector report gave me enough evidence to trim 10k off the final figure. Will it be mandatory for inspectors to receive calls from potential buyers? If not, good luck interpreting the whole report.
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Benny B84 🃏
Benny B84 🃏@B84Benny·
@TMFScottP The only benefit I can see is to the building inspectors. I wouldn't trust a sellers report
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Benny B84 🃏
Benny B84 🃏@B84Benny·
@greenytrades May have worked out for the best. A lot of factors are coming into play that suggest a correction maybe on the cards.
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Greeny
Greeny@greenytrades·
Sad news today - my house didn’t settle. They want more time to process 😭 just let me have huge debt already please.
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Jacinta Allan
Jacinta Allan@JacintaAllanMP·
If you're selling a home, you should have to provide a building inspection report - instead of every interested buyer paying for their own. We're changing the rules to require exactly that.
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Scotty Chal
Scotty Chal@shallowchal·
By every single metric - Australia is in a worse place than it was 10 years ago. It would appear that “leadership” has become a vagina counting contest. How’s that working out? 🤔
Scotty Chal tweet media
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b
b@JBiemansj34267·
@shallowchal Wages have gone up since Labor came into power. Fact.
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Benny B84 🃏
Benny B84 🃏@B84Benny·
@TMFScottP Tbh for a lot of first home buyers, being an investor first is there only option. Its easier to make $100k from property in 2 years then it is to save it. In regards to supply, we should allow mortgage holders to rent out their rooms tax free, in addition to other strategies.
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Scott Phillips
Scott Phillips@TMFScottP·
This'll set people off, but here goes. There's something really interesting about the cultural concept of 'getting ahead' by buying an investment property. What it means, for property in particular, rather than other assets, is 'getting ahead of the other guy'. Read on... 1/n
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Dave
Dave@GamewithDave·
Without telling me your age. What is the first video game you played? GIFS ONLY!!!
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Benny B84 🃏
Benny B84 🃏@B84Benny·
@TMFScottP This is what I find interesting. Not that the silent majority are moving to populism, but more so, that people who don't share their view can't comprehend where they are coming from. It tells me everything we need to know.
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Scott Phillips
Scott Phillips@TMFScottP·
This is how populism surges. It has echoes in Australia.
AnthroVet50@spooked75

Why is MAGA so hateful? I get asked this a lot. The short answer is: because hate is the point. But let me break it down. Grievance as identity MAGA isn't a political movement built on policy. It's built on resentment. The core message has always been "you've been wronged" — by elites, by immigrants, by cities, by universities, by the media, by women, by minorities, by anyone who isn't you. This isn't a coalition that comes together to BUILD something. It comes together to tear things down. Hate isn't a byproduct of the movement. It's the fuel. Zero-sum thinking They genuinely believe that if someone else gains, they lose. Rights for gay people? That's an attack on Christians. Immigrants succeeding? They must be stealing from "real Americans." A Black president? He must be illegitimate. There's no concept of shared prosperity or expanding opportunity. Just winners and losers. And they're terrified of losing. The dominance hierarchy A lot of MAGA is rooted in evangelical and authoritarian psychology. There's supposed to be a natural order: white at the top, Christian at the top, male at the top, straight at the top. When you've been at the top of a hierarchy your whole life, equality feels like oppression. Giving others a seat at the table feels like theft. The media ecosystem Fox News → OANN → Newsmax → podcasts → Twitter/X. It's a 24/7 rage machine. Every algorithm rewards outrage. Every host competes to be more extreme than the last. These people are literally addicted to anger. Neurologically. They get dopamine hits from feeling righteous fury. They wake up and immediately check their phones to find out what they should be mad about today. Turn it off for a week and they go through withdrawal. Economic anxiety — weaponized Here's the thing: a lot of the underlying pain is real. Deindustrialization gutted their towns. Opioids killed their families. Wages stagnated while costs exploded. The American Dream stopped working for them. But instead of blaming the corporations that shipped jobs overseas, or the billionaires that rigged the economy, or the politicians that deregulated everything — they're taught to blame immigrants. To blame welfare recipients. To blame Black people in cities. To blame trans kids. Classic fascist playbook: take legitimate economic anger and redirect it at the vulnerable. The permission structure Trump didn't create the hate. He just gave it permission. For decades, these people were told to keep the quiet part quiet. Be polite. Use dog whistles. Then Trump came along and said the loud part loud — and nothing happened. No consequences. He showed them they could be openly racist, openly cruel, openly contemptuous of democracy — and not only survive, but win. "He fights" doesn't mean he fights for them. It means he's mean to people they don't like. The cruelty is the point. Community built on enemies This is the part people miss: MAGA is a community. For a lot of these people — especially older, rural, isolated Americans — it's their entire social world. Their friends are MAGA. Their family is MAGA. Their church is MAGA. The hate is the membership card. The shared enemies are what bind them together. Leaving the movement doesn't just mean changing your politics. It means losing everyone you know. So they double down. And double down again. Because the alternative is being alone. The bottom line Why is MAGA so hateful? Because scared people + relentless propaganda + permission to be cruel + community built on shared enemies = hate as a lifestyle. They're not going to be reasoned out of it. They weren't reasoned into it. The only thing that works is making it socially and politically costly to be part of it. Outvoting them. Out-organizing them. And building something better that gives people a different place to belong.

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Benny B84 🃏
Benny B84 🃏@B84Benny·
RT @majnoon1: Ever wondered how a blockchain actually reaches an agreement without a single "leader" calling the shots? Chek This visuali…
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